Cases reported "Nervous System Neoplasms"

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1/23. Multifocal motor neuropathy with conduction block associated with metastatic lymphoma of the nervous system.

    Peripheral neuropathies occur in 5% of patients with Non-Hodgkin lymphoma and represent the effects of therapy, direct compression or nerve infiltration by tumor, or paraneoplastic effects. Multifocal motor neuropathy with conduction block (MMNCB) is a rare demyelinating disorder of unknown etiology characterized by progressive, distal, asymmetric weakness mostly of the upper limbs with minimal or no sensory loss. We report a patient, who developed MMNCB at the time of isolated CNS relapse from a diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. Marked neurological improvement was achieved using intravenous immunoglobulin treatment. To our knowledge, MMNCB has thus far not been described as part of the spectrum of lymphoma-related peripheral neuropathies.
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2/23. Glioneurofibroma: renaming the pediatric "gliofibroma": a neoplasm composed of schwann cells and astrocytes.

    Three children had central nervous system tumors with histologic and ultrastructural features corresponding to those of tumors previously described as "gliofibromas." These features, which include a composite appearance with glial and mesenchymal elements, with glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-containing and GFAP-immunonegative cells, diffuse S-100 immunoreactivity, and basal lamina wrapping processes of both cell types, suggest that the "mesenchymal" cells are schwann cells, not fibroblasts. We therefore propose to rename this entity "glioneurofibroma." The clinical behavior of these lesions is uncertain but is more often indolent or benign.
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3/23. central nervous system lymphoma in the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

    Primary central nervous system (CNS) lymphomas were studied in fifteen autopsied patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Using the working formulation for non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, the tumors were classified as large cell (7 patients), mixed large and small cell (6 patients), small cleaved cell (1 patient), and unclassifiable (1 patient). The mixed lymphomas displayed unusual features characterized by a high mitotic rate and the presence of numerous medium-sized cells (5 to 10 mus), not classifiable using the working formulation. Focal T cell and lymphoplasmacytoid B cell infiltrates accompanied lymphoma cells at the periphery of and remote from solid tumor masses in 9 cases. Immunohistochemical analysis of the lymphomas suggested B cell neoplasms. All of these patients had concurrent CNS and systemic cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections. The CNS infections were of both viral (CMV, human immunodeficiency virus (hiv), varicella zoster virus (VZV), progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) and non-viral (toxoplasmosis, candidiasis) etiology. In the general AIDS population at our institution, the autopsy incidence of CNS infections and systemic CMV was 63% and 60%, respectively. In contrast, the incidence for both these entities was 0% in otherwise healthy, non-AIDS patients with CNS lymphoma supports the hypothesis that viral infection plays a role in the pathogenesis of CNS lymphoma in the immunocompromised. Polyclonal lymphoplasmacytoid B and T cell infiltrates accompanying lymphoma may produce diagnostic difficulties on surgical biopsy. As these infiltrates were a frequent feature in this study, we caution that their recognition does not argue against the presence of CNS lymphoma.
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4/23. Anti-neuronal antibodies in paraneoplastic neurological disorders with small-cell lung carcinoma.

    Auto-antibodies of the neuronal anti-nuclear antibody (anti-Hu) type were found in serum of three patients suspected of a paraneoplastic syndrome of the central nervous system. In all three a small cell carcinoma of the lung was detected. The sera showed bright staining of neuronal nuclei sparing the nucleolus. In two patients the antibody was of the IgG class (titers 1:1600 and 1:4000). In one patient only an IgM class antibody was present (titer 1:1000). The presence of the anti-Hu antibody strongly supports a diagnosis of a paraneoplastic neurological syndrome associated with small cell carcinoma of the lung.
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5/23. Detection of occult CNS involvement of follicular small cleaved lymphoma by the polymerase chain reaction.

    A patient with follicular small cleaved lymphoma presented with an unusual clinical relapse in the central nervous system (CNS) without morphologic evidence of lymphoma cells in the cerebral spinal fluid (CSF). Molecular genetic analysis of the small number of cells in the CSF after in vitro dna amplification by the polymerase chain reaction demonstrated the presence of an abnormal translocation sequence between chromosomes 14 and 18. A similar translocation could be detected from the original fixed archival lymph node biopsy and from a small proportion of circulating mononuclear cells. These results indicated that occult lymphoma cells were present in the CSF and peripheral blood. Secondary CNS lymphoma involvement was identified at autopsy. This case demonstrates the enhanced sensitivity of lymphoma diagnosis from poorly cellular specimens after in vitro dna amplification.
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6/23. Chemotherapy with cisplatin for AFP-secreting germ-cell tumors of the central nervous system.

    Therapeutic results in 17 cases of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP)-secreting tumors of the central nervous system are reported. Twelve of the patients were male and five female. The patients' ages ranged from 5 years to 25 years (mean 13.6 years). The tumors originated in the pineal region in 10 cases, in the suprasellar region in four cases, and in both regions in one case; of the other two tumors, one originated in the basal ganglia and one in the sacrococcygeal region. Extraneural metastases or subarachnoid dissemination occurred in seven cases. Increased AFP titer in the serum or cerebrospinal fluid was verified in 13 cases. The patients were divided into two groups: those treated before (Group A) and those treated after (Group B) the introduction in 1980 of cisplatin as a chemotherapeutic agent. All seven Group A patients died, even after extensive therapy consisting of surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy (ACNU or adriamycin) in some of the cases. The mean survival time following diagnosis for Group A was 23.7 months. Six of the 10 Group B patients died an average of 25.8 months after diagnosis; however, the other four were still alive and well an average of 25.3 months after diagnosis. The tumors responded well to chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin either alone or combined with bleomycin and vinblastine. The initial response rate to treatment in Group B was 100% and five cases had a complete remission, verified by computerized tomography or the serum AFP level. Once the tumor recurred, the response to cisplatin was markedly decreased. It is suggested that an effective therapy must still be sought for recurrent tumors.
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7/23. Cytologic and immunohistochemical diagnosis of neuroendocrine (Merkel cell) carcinoma in cerebrospinal fluid.

    Neuroendocrine (Merkel cell) carcinoma of the skin is a rare entity. Often locally aggressive, this lesion may also metastasize to organ systems, including bone, liver, and brain. The authors report a case of a 64-year-old male who presented with hoarseness and dysphagia 17 months after resection of a primary Merkel cell carcinoma of the nose. Additional studies revealed bilateral vocal cord paralysis secondary to central nervous system dysfunction. Cytologic evaluation of the cerebrospinal fluid revealed malignant tumor cells consistent with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma. Presented are the cytologic and immunohistochemical findings in a case of metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma involving the central nervous system.
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8/23. Schwannomatosis. An unusual variant of neurofibromatosis or a distinct clinical entity?

    Multiple schwannomas have frequently been seen in patients with neurofibromatosis. Recently, the association of multiple cutaneous schwannomas, central nervous system tumors, and various neurologic deficits has been described in Japanese patients as a condition called schwannomatosis. We describe the first non-Japanese cases of schwannomatosis and compare and contrast this unusual condition with the well-known variants of neurofibromatosis. We conclude that the features of schwannomatosis are distinct and define a condition that does not fit into the current classification scheme of neurofibromatosis. The occurrence of multiple cutaneous schwannomas in the absence of cardinal features of neurofibromatosis may indicate the presence of central nervous system tumors or various neurologic deficits.
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9/23. brachial plexus neuropathy following high-dose cytarabine in acute monoblastic leukemia.

    We describe brachial plexus neuropathy with high-dose cytarabine (Ara-C) therapy in a man who had acute monoblastic leukemia. signs and symptoms of brachial plexus neuropathy appeared on two occasions within hours of exposure to high-dose Ara-C. central nervous system complications have been described following systemic and intrathecal Ara-C. High-dose Ara-C has not been implicated previously as a cause of brachial plexus neuropathy.
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10/23. Melanotic schwannoma arising in the sympathetic ganglion.

    A case of melanotic schwannoma, the 28th reported in the literature and the second to arise in the sympathetic ganglion, was reported in a 39-year-old man who remains free of recurrence or metastasis since removal of the tumor. In common with earlier benign melanotic schwannomas, its ultrastructural study revealed well-developed contiguous external lamina as opposed to absent or only minimally developed external lamina seen in malignant melanotic schwannomas. This emphasizes the use of electron microscopy in the diagnosis of this tumor. The literature yields only nine melanotic tumors (including one malignant melanotic schwannoma) arising in the sympathetic nervous system; all nine tumors had a malignant clinical course. Therefore, the present case represents the first "benign" tumor among ten melanotic tumors, and the second among 28 melanotic schwannomas to arise in the sympathetic nervous system.
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